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Dec 3, 2012
12/12
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CNBC
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second, germany, including the rest of the european union seems to be going into a recession and germany entering it means 2013, first half, is going to be very difficult. chinese growth slowed significantly. i can't see where the u.s. growth will come from. exports will suffer. >> jim, we are seeing a lot of activity at the end of the year as investors and companies try to beat those higher tax rates. for example, some companies issuing special dividends because they assume tax rates will go up next year, which will they will, but you don't think it is good for toward the special dividends we are seeing. >> i'm okay if it is a dividend-paying company, like utility companies or high-yield staple stock or something. if they're going to pay a special head -- because that's why shareholders buy their company. i'm not okay with it in areas where i make an investment for companies for growth and they come up and pay me a special dividend this year. it makes me weary. if the best i can get is they will pay their cash to pay a dividend i question if they have any growth opportunities. >> what d
second, germany, including the rest of the european union seems to be going into a recession and germany entering it means 2013, first half, is going to be very difficult. chinese growth slowed significantly. i can't see where the u.s. growth will come from. exports will suffer. >> jim, we are seeing a lot of activity at the end of the year as investors and companies try to beat those higher tax rates. for example, some companies issuing special dividends because they assume tax rates...
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Jun 12, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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it essentially means the creditor countries like germany have to be willing to stand behind the borrowing countries like spain and greece. i have some sympathy for the german position, which boils down to, why do you think they'll be more careful with our money than they were with their own? the germans are very sincere is saying more europe, not less. we believe in the european project. they are not convinced they have gotten the buy-in yet from the other countries that keep wanting to use the german credit card to get themselves out of their problems. so for europe to solve their problems will require movement on both sides. it will require the germans to become more comfortable with the idea that their credit card will have to play a more important role in keeping europe together, and the other countries to realize that that credit card will require them to make certain concessions of their own that they have thus far not prepared to make. >> i don't think europe will solve its problems, unfortunately. i think that's one reason you see the royal stock market here. if europe's banks col
it essentially means the creditor countries like germany have to be willing to stand behind the borrowing countries like spain and greece. i have some sympathy for the german position, which boils down to, why do you think they'll be more careful with our money than they were with their own? the germans are very sincere is saying more europe, not less. we believe in the european project. they are not convinced they have gotten the buy-in yet from the other countries that keep wanting to use the...
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we raise interest rates makes us a magnet for savings from around the world and by the way one more germany you know conversely to say well we cheapen the value of the dollar but so what your wages went up so it all comes out the wash that may be true on average but it's not true individual by individual there are winners and losers but we know the winners are their heads funds their bankers people who buy a gold people buy the hard assets the losers are you know teachers firemen people on a pension insurance policies and nobody's anyone on a fixed income their savings or rode by the fed's policy so it's really a wealth transfer from everyday americans to the elites a really good point it's a while transfer windows way when you know people don't often frame it in that way and it's so important to do i want to ask you about one currency wars related story that's just recently come out because we were talking about the g three central banks new data shows that japan has used what they're calling stealth intervention in november to stem yang and. because earnings are getting hammered with some
we raise interest rates makes us a magnet for savings from around the world and by the way one more germany you know conversely to say well we cheapen the value of the dollar but so what your wages went up so it all comes out the wash that may be true on average but it's not true individual by individual there are winners and losers but we know the winners are their heads funds their bankers people who buy a gold people buy the hard assets the losers are you know teachers firemen people on a...
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always wanted the key is to lower you know labor not german domination in germany german domination via an economic model imposed on the periphery what what spain and portugal and greece and others really have to do is get their unit labor costs down and so you know paul krugman area over being he said you know quit the euro go back to your old currency the drop by cheap in your currency and that will lower you know labor costs well that's one way to do it with all kinds of unpleasant side effects and unintended consequences but the other way to do it is to stay in the euro and just slow your you know labor costs inside the euro it is deflationary i think the big news is that until recently germany was going to put all the burden of adjustment on the peripheral countries they had to come all the way down now we're going to see is those countries going to lower the cost for germany is going to allow its course to go up a little more germany's going to tolerate more inflation than people realize we all know the history of germany and inflation right granted they're going to tolerate m
always wanted the key is to lower you know labor not german domination in germany german domination via an economic model imposed on the periphery what what spain and portugal and greece and others really have to do is get their unit labor costs down and so you know paul krugman area over being he said you know quit the euro go back to your old currency the drop by cheap in your currency and that will lower you know labor costs well that's one way to do it with all kinds of unpleasant side...
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Jun 6, 2012
06/12
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CNBC
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spain and germany. i can't stress enough how much more important spain is than italy or greece or anyone. spain's got a huge deficit and gigantic banks, including bbva. which both look a lot like fannie mae and freddie mac did before they collapsed. right now spanish banks are facing daily runs, in part because while their deposits are guaranteed, they may not be guaranteed in euros so if spain falls apart, it's more likely these depositors will get a different much less valuable currency if the banks go under. it's vital that spanish depositors be given a reason not to pull out of spanish banks because right now, it's the only rational thing to do. in return for more control over spanish finances and unified central authority germany which pretty much stands alone in europe and the world, for that matter, must accede to some sort of deposit insurance that allows guarantees in euros. how important is this? listen, i got to put this in english and make it so you understand it because everyone talks aroun
spain and germany. i can't stress enough how much more important spain is than italy or greece or anyone. spain's got a huge deficit and gigantic banks, including bbva. which both look a lot like fannie mae and freddie mac did before they collapsed. right now spanish banks are facing daily runs, in part because while their deposits are guaranteed, they may not be guaranteed in euros so if spain falls apart, it's more likely these depositors will get a different much less valuable currency if...
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china our go to germany that's a booming relationships that's the difference uncouple in germany from europe so a lot of countries around the world are doing it so i think you'll see a polite no on buying spanish and italian bonds as the chinese not become suicidal and this is america can be a good business person for germany but i doubt she can do the same for your the chinese are very polite indeed but they're real it's above everything but they don't want to be saddled with the insanity that is at the productivity of italy and spain compared the productivity of germany the euro zone's work very well for germany these other weaker countries have gone on a spending binge binge and bought german exports with that no longer being the case because they're in no position to do that germany is it's absolutely vital looks for more partners to buy their wherewithal and that means more from china or from india the problem is the whole world is in a downturn and so who buys this excess german capacity becomes vital for the future of germany because of germany goes down well then the titanic r
china our go to germany that's a booming relationships that's the difference uncouple in germany from europe so a lot of countries around the world are doing it so i think you'll see a polite no on buying spanish and italian bonds as the chinese not become suicidal and this is america can be a good business person for germany but i doubt she can do the same for your the chinese are very polite indeed but they're real it's above everything but they don't want to be saddled with the insanity that...
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Oct 12, 2012
10/12
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WJLA
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>> they lived in germany, but he has been serving in afghanistan for the past four and have my moments. mom and kids' food to our region for vacation without knowing that dad was in town. and the people are looking forward to tomorrow's game and the weather for the game as well. >> bundle up. but no rain. outside, this is how is it is around nationals park. the temperature outside right now is 53 degrees. tomorrow, the place will really be hopping again. the overnight low tomorrow night, by the way, we do have a freeze watch. it will be 31 degrees. it will not be that cold in washington. montgomery county, frederick county, that is for tomorrow night and into saturday morning. there will be a lot of spots near the freezing mark. here in washington right now the 52 degrees. 41 degrees out in winchester after a high temperatures into the 60's. we are into a rather cool pattern and that will continue but along with a lot of sunshine as we head into the weekend. look at the temperatures out west. and also, a lot of color. right in our own neck of the was, there is especially some nice colo
>> they lived in germany, but he has been serving in afghanistan for the past four and have my moments. mom and kids' food to our region for vacation without knowing that dad was in town. and the people are looking forward to tomorrow's game and the weather for the game as well. >> bundle up. but no rain. outside, this is how is it is around nationals park. the temperature outside right now is 53 degrees. tomorrow, the place will really be hopping again. the overnight low tomorrow...
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Jul 30, 2012
07/12
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FOXNEWSW
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if our math and science scores are good as germany we would grow as half as much a year. this is possible. there is evidence from our own states and other countris and that's what the book try to show. >> we hear about tax magedion and hit us in the face unless congress acts first of the year. so i am assuming that this would knock any possibility of growth out of the way. >> that's right. raising tax rates and personal tax rates and taxes on capitol gains and taxes on dividends that go way up from 15 percent to the 40s for many people. that would center a devastating affect on growth. yes, we need to make the changings now. we can't sit back and expect to get to four percent and two percent. >> jim and amany thank you for joining us. we'll find out why four percent is a better option than raise the tax accident that would devastate the economy than improve it. >> why are christians being targeted we'll talk to congressman webster and jim ryan and their wives when we ryan and their wives when we return [ male announcer ] if you had a dollar for every dollar car insurance
if our math and science scores are good as germany we would grow as half as much a year. this is possible. there is evidence from our own states and other countris and that's what the book try to show. >> we hear about tax magedion and hit us in the face unless congress acts first of the year. so i am assuming that this would knock any possibility of growth out of the way. >> that's right. raising tax rates and personal tax rates and taxes on capitol gains and taxes on dividends...
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Mar 12, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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. >> hi, i'm in germany's daily newspaper. somebody aerearlier said that president obama is in a pretty decision right now, known for mostly positive campaigns but yourself said that negative ads do work. so i was wondering do you have any advice for his campaign, how should he react going forward? >> i was asked in 2008 by hillary clinton and barack obama and chris dodd's campaign to work from those campaigns. so i thought about this a lot. i didn't do it but i have thought about this a lot. and i think if obama is in a good enough position that he can do some things that lift up america the way "morning in america" did foray agaireagan. i think that can help him be more effective if he wins, if he knows he's going to win. reagan was in a position where it became pretty clear he was going to win again. and that kind of confidence is rare if you're not as confidence about that then you're going to have to spend your money on the negative because you need to win. and so the long-term branding of having upliftings, commercials w
. >> hi, i'm in germany's daily newspaper. somebody aerearlier said that president obama is in a pretty decision right now, known for mostly positive campaigns but yourself said that negative ads do work. so i was wondering do you have any advice for his campaign, how should he react going forward? >> i was asked in 2008 by hillary clinton and barack obama and chris dodd's campaign to work from those campaigns. so i thought about this a lot. i didn't do it but i have thought about...
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and iran which way will germany swing well carthage is the answer again curfew. this must be destroyed now many romans went and fought all these punic wars they fought as valiant soldiers dedicating their patriotic fervor to rome their lands were stolen they paid the price so that carthage was destroyed they themselves were the victims this is part of carthage this is part of iran being destroyed must be wiped off the face of the earth forever standing up to the empire that they could control the straits of hormuz based on a paper currency that is being diluted based into oblivion sure but it's a great deal in the world to get that we all know it's a currency that is worth nothing imagine if you came up with this fabric of paper here and i had to give you all my labor for that for just because you said it also stole this is focused on this piece of paper and it's a movie going to trade out a premium to every other currency out there on the globe well this sort of a mentality of course trickles down even critics of safety net increasingly depend on it so this is a
and iran which way will germany swing well carthage is the answer again curfew. this must be destroyed now many romans went and fought all these punic wars they fought as valiant soldiers dedicating their patriotic fervor to rome their lands were stolen they paid the price so that carthage was destroyed they themselves were the victims this is part of carthage this is part of iran being destroyed must be wiped off the face of the earth forever standing up to the empire that they could control...
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Apr 21, 2012
04/12
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CSPAN2
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frankly i was a correspondent who lived in germany twice. it never occurred to me to write a straight history of the not the era biography of hitler. it has been done, done several times extraordinarily well that is also preoccupied with the stories i was covering at the moment, the collapse of communism, reunification. but i was always fascinated by all those books on all of those accounts. but two things really got me going on this subject. and that is one oddly enough to reset and the appearance of books about america's apparent in london. another source of inspiration. but they say wait a minute. what about all the americans in berlin especially? well, has anybody really written about them before? and i went through and while there are plenty of individual stories, memoirs, biographies, nobody had tried to use but their story together and somehow they faded from the personal consciousness of people that it just seemed like paris of course and as that has that romantic aura to it. but the real place to be in the early 20s was berlin. it i
frankly i was a correspondent who lived in germany twice. it never occurred to me to write a straight history of the not the era biography of hitler. it has been done, done several times extraordinarily well that is also preoccupied with the stories i was covering at the moment, the collapse of communism, reunification. but i was always fascinated by all those books on all of those accounts. but two things really got me going on this subject. and that is one oddly enough to reset and the...
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Mar 9, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 105
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they said, japan would be at about 5, they said germany would be about at 4. the united states, 3.5, 3.8. it's deja vu all over again. we're exactly in the same place that we were. remember what happened -- nobody saw it coming. the people that love america, our own economists said it's over and we bode clear up to $15 trillion. can you imagine -- i don't know why, i tell mba classes this, why didn't anybody write about this? somebody needs to write that down and say, how can we do that? of course, what happened was, we just had an unbelievable run of innovation and entrepreneur ship, by the way, if you want a big number, if you add the stubbs over 30 years over the projection, you see what i mean, add the stubbs over the regression line and the stubbs, that equals $100 trillion. now, you finally have a big number. that's how much money we had over those 30 years by outperforming where we were supposed to be. and that's also how we had this 25% of the total gdp of the whole world. i just want to hit a couple of these points. i don't mean to make them sound rec
they said, japan would be at about 5, they said germany would be about at 4. the united states, 3.5, 3.8. it's deja vu all over again. we're exactly in the same place that we were. remember what happened -- nobody saw it coming. the people that love america, our own economists said it's over and we bode clear up to $15 trillion. can you imagine -- i don't know why, i tell mba classes this, why didn't anybody write about this? somebody needs to write that down and say, how can we do that? of...
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Mar 4, 2012
03/12
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KNTV
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i find that disgusting. >> reporter: we asked germany's largest phone company what it would have charged for the same call. they said about $10, not $41. the u.s. transportation command which is in charge of moving troops around the world told us it doesn't have jurisdiction over these phones in germany. but it is concerned about the troops and says notices have now been posted to warn of the costs of calling home. lisa myers, nbc news, washington. >>> when we come back, saluting the man behind one of the iconic images of our time. >>> there is word tonight of multibillion dollar settlement for thousands of victims in the 2010 oil spill in the gulf of mexico. our chief environmental affairs correspondent anne thompson has details. >> reporter: good evening. the proposed settlement involves up to 120,000 shrimpers, oystermen, business owners and individuals all impacted by the oil spill. b.p. estimates it will pay $7.8 billion to settle their claims which fall into two categories -- economic losses and medical claims. $2.3 billion is set aside to pay for the seafood industry losses alone.
i find that disgusting. >> reporter: we asked germany's largest phone company what it would have charged for the same call. they said about $10, not $41. the u.s. transportation command which is in charge of moving troops around the world told us it doesn't have jurisdiction over these phones in germany. but it is concerned about the troops and says notices have now been posted to warn of the costs of calling home. lisa myers, nbc news, washington. >>> when we come back, saluting...
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Aug 10, 2012
08/12
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CNBC
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germany, the markets are up 18% in their own currency. french market is beating the dow-jones average for the year. same with sweden and switzerland. netherlands is tied with the dow. italy was supposed to be on the verge of collapse and is barely down. if the european markets are doing so well why the heck should our stock market be kept down by them? if germany is up 18% with that negative data shouldn't we at least be even with them? and not way behind them? we are way behind germany. european lamentations begin to get lost on me. you can't dismiss these kind of gains. the stock markets are europe are shrugging off their own woe so at the very least we should be able to shrug off some of their woes. what about washington? right now president obama looks like a winner. i'm just doing analysis. isn't romney supposed to be better for stocks? doesn't the fiscal cliff loom at the end of the year? to me obama is a known quantity and believe it or not the stock market has actually quite done quite well under him. people want to quibble but th
germany, the markets are up 18% in their own currency. french market is beating the dow-jones average for the year. same with sweden and switzerland. netherlands is tied with the dow. italy was supposed to be on the verge of collapse and is barely down. if the european markets are doing so well why the heck should our stock market be kept down by them? if germany is up 18% with that negative data shouldn't we at least be even with them? and not way behind them? we are way behind germany....
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is under germany's thumb then in effect germany's going to have control over their gold and as they say that everyone nobody wants to talk about gold now you won't find a central banker in the world with one good thing to say about gold but it is the plan b. as long as people buy into paper money they don't need to talk about gold but once that confidence collapses they'll be able to pull the gold out from the sidelines and say look we've got a new system backed by gold the weaklings in that scenario or the u.k. and also china by the way russia's been doing a good job of acquiring gold their approach they're kind of closing in on the thousand tons they'll be there in the other year or so the thousand tons is a good quantity relative to the size of the russian economy and of course they have oil natural gas so there are no it's really good shit most of course russia watches the kaiser report and we've been encouraging them to buy gold for a few years now and they've been taking our advice but talking about these central banks and including the bank of international settlements there's a
is under germany's thumb then in effect germany's going to have control over their gold and as they say that everyone nobody wants to talk about gold now you won't find a central banker in the world with one good thing to say about gold but it is the plan b. as long as people buy into paper money they don't need to talk about gold but once that confidence collapses they'll be able to pull the gold out from the sidelines and say look we've got a new system backed by gold the weaklings in that...
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think the next two bits of good news this friday there's a big four summit in europe france italy spain germany and. you know the rest of the countries are a lot smaller they want to get their act together before the european wide summit on june twenty eighth twenty ninth that's when we'll see some very big announcements and i think positive ones ok and on a lighter note we talked about the humpback whale where it's right where you know what else can the fed do and before we started this show you mentioned the butterfly to a oh that well the fly is any tree where you've got to get three points to lower your curve and you want to sell the short sell the long and buy the middle or do the opposite you might buy the short by the long and sell the middle but basically the idea is there are two wings in the middle so it resembles a butterfly but it's very similar to the whale diagram that you had up there but terry the traders are call that a butterfly trade the problem with the butterfly trade now you don't want to fight the fed i mean the fed's out there buying six to ten year notes they say they s
think the next two bits of good news this friday there's a big four summit in europe france italy spain germany and. you know the rest of the countries are a lot smaller they want to get their act together before the european wide summit on june twenty eighth twenty ninth that's when we'll see some very big announcements and i think positive ones ok and on a lighter note we talked about the humpback whale where it's right where you know what else can the fed do and before we started this show...
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it with to recreate a link between the social the public and the capitalist short term like we are germany is going to people who fail should be allowed to fail and go bankrupt what's happened now in the west every time somebody gets in trouble they call up the government save bail me out safely save me but they captured him and nothing and after jim they did that to the banks they did that they didn't he didn't even have banks if you consider the article the only one of our architects preschool bankrupt we're not going to remarry bankrupt like i say why in the united states the government bails out the banks for instance and it wasn't just the banks the banks are us coming out of a failed at least for a sham and keep going keep going tell you why i think. first you've got you have to provide for that wisconsin that's not socialism agenda where you have to to promote relentless consumption you have to do two things you have to control constantly other prize externalities resources and underprice externalities when you do that you have to do something else you have to fight any attempt at r
it with to recreate a link between the social the public and the capitalist short term like we are germany is going to people who fail should be allowed to fail and go bankrupt what's happened now in the west every time somebody gets in trouble they call up the government save bail me out safely save me but they captured him and nothing and after jim they did that to the banks they did that they didn't he didn't even have banks if you consider the article the only one of our architects...
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121
Jun 12, 2012
06/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 121
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whether or not the eurozone collapses is more or less in the hands of german voters and the chancellor of germany as the cover more or less implied and here we have the confluence of fiscal events occurring in the end of the year and the republicans and democrats agreed to pile everything on to the lame duck session. we'll have a referendum and then they'll decide what to do, and in the event we were discovering it wasn't so smart because when people know there was a gigantic event coming and next there will be a good year or bad year, the incentive is to wait or delay, and i suspect that will intensify as the year comes along and it has been seen the impact of that uncertainty happening. while i don't think it can explain why things are weak now, the confluence of that plus what's going on in europe and china and the emerging markets which were certainly the last haven of strong, economic growth and brazil, india and china, and in china they're waiting to see whether the legendary ability like stop and start growth on command holds up this time. if you're a business person and i had a blog where
whether or not the eurozone collapses is more or less in the hands of german voters and the chancellor of germany as the cover more or less implied and here we have the confluence of fiscal events occurring in the end of the year and the republicans and democrats agreed to pile everything on to the lame duck session. we'll have a referendum and then they'll decide what to do, and in the event we were discovering it wasn't so smart because when people know there was a gigantic event coming and...
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144
Aug 9, 2012
08/12
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CNBC
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eye 144
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for a long time we believed germany was the only place of strength in europe. how did we get around the 9% in france in hard to call that an aberration with similar one in sweden. 6% in amsterdam. spain's down 16%. the great depression of spain. italy is barely down at all. around 3%. is that the kind of decline that tells you the world is coming to an end? or is it possible it's the decline that tells you severe recession might be coming to an end? wind the next year? remember, six to nine months is typical time frame for a market to predict things. of course nobody's ready for that sort of positive spin. no more ready though than any volleyball team set for a spike. but they do happen repeatedly, both in volleyball and in the stock market. which brings me to the dreaded unreturnable kill shot. we're seeing woman's volleyball. women, congratulations to the american team, easy to do. it's much more stark in the stock game. for months now buyers have been hiding in the most defensive stocks they can find. utilities, consumer packaged goods. how could you not wit
for a long time we believed germany was the only place of strength in europe. how did we get around the 9% in france in hard to call that an aberration with similar one in sweden. 6% in amsterdam. spain's down 16%. the great depression of spain. italy is barely down at all. around 3%. is that the kind of decline that tells you the world is coming to an end? or is it possible it's the decline that tells you severe recession might be coming to an end? wind the next year? remember, six to nine...
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May 8, 2012
05/12
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CNBC
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at the end of the day can germany and greece and italy stay in a marriage? two countries that have vastly different economic ambitions. >> and spain. >> and spain, sue. exactly. >> spain i think is one of the markets that is not being followed right now anyway as closely, the focus is on greece. i personally am more worried about italy and spain. >> folks, thank you very much. dennis, sue, jim, great. so is it fair that underwater b of a borrowers behind on their mortgages may be eligible for a principal reduction of up to $150,000? doesn't it make you just want to get behind on your mortgage if you get a principal reduction? go and vote on our street poll at streetsigns.cnbc.com. we're going to show you the results during "street signs," during the 2:00 p.m. eastern hour. we will be back meantime in two minutes. minutes. ♪ ♪ i can do anything ♪ i can do anything today ♪ i can go anywhere ♪ i can go anywhere today ♪ la la la la la la la [ male announcer ] dow solutions help millions of people by helping to make gluten free bread that doesn't tast
at the end of the day can germany and greece and italy stay in a marriage? two countries that have vastly different economic ambitions. >> and spain. >> and spain, sue. exactly. >> spain i think is one of the markets that is not being followed right now anyway as closely, the focus is on greece. i personally am more worried about italy and spain. >> folks, thank you very much. dennis, sue, jim, great. so is it fair that underwater b of a borrowers behind on their...
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germany and spain are both share the euro so they have the same central bank european central bank the same monetary policy germany's house prices remain absolutely flat throughout the entire crisis spain had an enormous tells price increase considerably larger than the united states now what bernanke he fails to acknowledge is that a rate that was appropriate and dusseldorf germany may not have been appropriate for a borrower in the dritte indeed one of the problems with the euro area is the capital from germany was being exploited to the periphery as a result of the uniform interest rate that was inappropriate for both germany as well as spain now he also claims that countries like the u.k. with their own monetary policy and with higher interest rates also experience their own housing boom but what he fails to acknowledge here as in the case of latvia is that the countries monetary policy can be overwhelmed by that of a much larger country like the us or japan in last year's case people were borrowing money and yet where they could do so at a lower interest rate and then they were pu
germany and spain are both share the euro so they have the same central bank european central bank the same monetary policy germany's house prices remain absolutely flat throughout the entire crisis spain had an enormous tells price increase considerably larger than the united states now what bernanke he fails to acknowledge is that a rate that was appropriate and dusseldorf germany may not have been appropriate for a borrower in the dritte indeed one of the problems with the euro area is the...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 12, 2012
07/12
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WHUT
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a clash between courts and religion in germany. jewish and muslim groups join forces to condemn a ruling on circumcision. >> it's 7:00 a.m. in washington. early evening in beijing and 12:00 noon here in london where bbc world service radio is set to broadcast from its iconic bush headquarters for the last time. from there it's fulfilled its historic mission. highlighted nations shall speak unto nations. let's cross now live to bush radio studio. >> i can confirm to the house that there remains no specific security threat to the games and the threat level remains unchanged. and let me resure there is no compromise. >> planners are also looking at alternative planners into london after the airport was closed for emergency repairs. officials say saudi arabia will send two female athletes to the london games. the first saudi women to take part in olympics competing in judo and track and field events. >> neither of the two athletes have staffed main qualifying criteria, but the i.o.c. was so determined to have them participate, special
a clash between courts and religion in germany. jewish and muslim groups join forces to condemn a ruling on circumcision. >> it's 7:00 a.m. in washington. early evening in beijing and 12:00 noon here in london where bbc world service radio is set to broadcast from its iconic bush headquarters for the last time. from there it's fulfilled its historic mission. highlighted nations shall speak unto nations. let's cross now live to bush radio studio. >> i can confirm to the house that...
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Sep 24, 2012
09/12
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WGN
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the government says two climbers from germany and spain and a local guide were killed. one rescuer says at least 11 bodies have been spotted. the climbers were at an altitutde of 21,650 feet. the mountain is 26,780 feet high. rescue efforts have stopped for the night and will resume on monday. some fear the entire camp may have been swept away. the baby panda cub born just one week ago at the national zoo in washington died today. the cub weighed only about three and a half ounces when it was born last week. panda keepers and zoo volunteers heard its mother making sounds of distress this morning. the exact cause of the cub's death is not known yet. the panda cam that allowed the public to watch the baby and its mother over the internet was turned off.. and the body was retrieved for evaluation. trader joe's is voluntarily recalling can better because of potentia salmonella peanut butter because of potential salmonella contamination. that outbreak has sickened 29 people in 18 states. >> next door restaurant critiour restaurant critic visits a new spot >> later in chicago
the government says two climbers from germany and spain and a local guide were killed. one rescuer says at least 11 bodies have been spotted. the climbers were at an altitutde of 21,650 feet. the mountain is 26,780 feet high. rescue efforts have stopped for the night and will resume on monday. some fear the entire camp may have been swept away. the baby panda cub born just one week ago at the national zoo in washington died today. the cub weighed only about three and a half ounces when it was...
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Jun 9, 2012
06/12
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CNBC
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we keep hearing there will be a rescue plan in germany. we need a joint same that excludes germany and says the eu and spain agree on the equivalent of federal deposit insurance that guarantees in euros to put an end to any security risk for those banks. if we get that, we rally regarding of what else is on this board. we get that, because you saw what happened on just the whiff of it. of course, the converse could be true, too, so understand just how binary the markets have become. today we've got a big call out of the citigroup, and networking companies, i think they're trying to anticipate this. i by ciena will bolster the view that spending is coming back. but finisar not -- i'll bet ciena will be positive. texas instruments gives a mid quarter update. we need to hear them reiterate their bullishness. apple fans will probably be paying close attention to texas instruments. listen, without ever mentioning apple by name as suppliers, can't identify them as a client without risking the business. texas instruments will let you know, i beli
we keep hearing there will be a rescue plan in germany. we need a joint same that excludes germany and says the eu and spain agree on the equivalent of federal deposit insurance that guarantees in euros to put an end to any security risk for those banks. if we get that, we rally regarding of what else is on this board. we get that, because you saw what happened on just the whiff of it. of course, the converse could be true, too, so understand just how binary the markets have become. today we've...
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Mar 27, 2012
03/12
by
CNN
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people expected and that's been helping to lift markets particularly in germany but across the board it's still looking positive despite the fact that we've had some of these indices posting five consecutive days' worth of losses last week, some like the dax and cac 40, an excuse to buy. that's more or less what's happening. >> if you look at the markets in asia certainly getting a pop today, nina. got that positive number from wall street overnight. that was the follow-on through the asian markets today. to their highest level in six weeks. across the board except for the shank shy composite which tends to go its own way, the nikkei up 2.3%, big jump for japan. post tsunami high. the country's largest exporter sony closing up more than %, hong kong's hang seng index rose 1.0% and australia getting a boost of 0.9%. this is what happened to the u.s. markets and asia does tend to follow those movements closely. all three rallying on the bernanke suggestion. here's how the close was. the nasdaq 1.8, the dow 1.2, the s&p 1.4%. now, at another four-year high for the s&p. interesting, nina
people expected and that's been helping to lift markets particularly in germany but across the board it's still looking positive despite the fact that we've had some of these indices posting five consecutive days' worth of losses last week, some like the dax and cac 40, an excuse to buy. that's more or less what's happening. >> if you look at the markets in asia certainly getting a pop today, nina. got that positive number from wall street overnight. that was the follow-on through the...
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92
Jun 27, 2012
06/12
by
WBAL
tv
eye 92
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and get them out of the context of germany versus spain. the ratings of a spain versus germany football match matter more to newscorp than the actual tug of war between the two european powers. but no one thought of that until today. this is equivalent of howard beel's protestation that he's mad as hell and not going to take it anymore. and given how horribly this market trades for all sorts of reasons that have absolutely nothing to do with fox news or 20th century fox or taking two for that matter, william neeson has particular skills without regarding the fundamentals. who can blame them? the bottom line, before you sell your stocks because you're worried about the emt u. summit or the down trades, remember what rupert murdoch floated today. think how much money was made today by leaking news of a breakup. and remember, many, more companies as diverse as ebay, proctor and gamble and john & johnson or jack in the box were mad as hell and didn't wbt to take that euro market trash anymore. keith? >> caller: hi, boo-yah. i heard that newscor
and get them out of the context of germany versus spain. the ratings of a spain versus germany football match matter more to newscorp than the actual tug of war between the two european powers. but no one thought of that until today. this is equivalent of howard beel's protestation that he's mad as hell and not going to take it anymore. and given how horribly this market trades for all sorts of reasons that have absolutely nothing to do with fox news or 20th century fox or taking two for that...
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188
Apr 3, 2012
04/12
by
WBAL
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eye 188
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while germany's got a smoking hot economy with extremely low unemployment, the rest of the country seems to be getting weaker, in exchange for the money they need to stay afloat. buttressing the negatives, a weak european purchasing manager's report showing contraction in manufacturing. so what happens? all right. get this. so saturday night, high as a kite off of the china thing. then between 4:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. this morning, europe gets hit, spain, and then the italy. the two weakest major economies, obliterating the positives out of china. i mean, everything looks in free fall again in europe. in fact, by 5:15 a.m., do you know what the chatter was? chatter among traders? that we didn't really want china to be strong. because that lowers the chance of rate cuts that can stimulate global growth. in other words, no, the glass isn't half full with good growth from china. it's three quarters empty because the news wasn't bad enough to trigger interest rate relief. the idea being that china can't offset european weakness, because the chinese government's not doing enough to promote gro
while germany's got a smoking hot economy with extremely low unemployment, the rest of the country seems to be getting weaker, in exchange for the money they need to stay afloat. buttressing the negatives, a weak european purchasing manager's report showing contraction in manufacturing. so what happens? all right. get this. so saturday night, high as a kite off of the china thing. then between 4:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. this morning, europe gets hit, spain, and then the italy. the two weakest...
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oh absolutely germany and japan both have circuses with you know trade surpluses with the united states and their currencies have been going up against united states for decades that cameras are the japanese yen is up about five hundred percent against the dollar over the past several decades and they still have a balance of trade surplus with the united states and with most of the world no no no you cannot i mean that the politicians like to blame it on the chinese the chinese have big trade deficits with many other countries including germany and japan as you just pointed up and yet those current countries have a much higher cost of doing business much higher labor we do and yet there's still extremely competitive and it's largely because of quality and service and being attentive to the customers quality and speaking of germany merkel is going to be in china looking for beijing's support on the ailing euro she reportedly wants china to contribute via the i.m.f. to a financial firewall to stem contagion from the euro zone crisis what do you think china will and should say to her. well
oh absolutely germany and japan both have circuses with you know trade surpluses with the united states and their currencies have been going up against united states for decades that cameras are the japanese yen is up about five hundred percent against the dollar over the past several decades and they still have a balance of trade surplus with the united states and with most of the world no no no you cannot i mean that the politicians like to blame it on the chinese the chinese have big trade...